Unread postby vault3rb0y » Wed Aug 12, 2009 5:28 pm
For the level that they were jumping at, yes. I think its all about different elements coming together....
Remember the football video games (im sure they are more advanced now) where you have certain degrees of skill for "strength, speed, power, guts, weight, hieght, etc".... and you were given a certain baseline amount to choose to assign 0-10 for like.... 8 different skill areas relevant to football. And you could always max out like 2 of the 8 skill sets but the player would be really fast, really tall, but get his "es H eye tee" rocked when he went out for a pass? Welll.... i kinda see the vault like that, accept with like 100 skill areas, not just 8. And you can "max out" maybe 10 of these early on, but it wont matter if you suck at the other 90. Eventually, you could be really, really good with 80 of these skills, but those 20 or less will hold you down. Thats when you need to focus on improving those other 20, get them at least close to as good as your other 80 skills, and you will get better. Soo back to that one pull-up- that may be all the strength you need to vault 12' which is high for a high school girl. But once you get to that point, your other skills have gotten good enough and your "pull-up" skill (or upper body strength skill) needs to catch up. Does that make sense? Thats just how i see it. A coaches whole job focuses around finding what skills would be easiest to improve and which ones would be most beneficial to improve, and improve those skills. I would say about 20 of those 100 skills would be athleticism and 80 would be technical ability, with some overlap.
The greater the challenge, the more glorious the triumph